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Fossils of the largest raptor ever found in Argentina

- Scott Gleeson

The fossils of a gigantic raptor three stories tall from nose to tail was discovered in Argentina, making it the largest dinosaur of the raptor family ever recorded, paleontolo­gist say.

A research team at the Argentine Museum of Natural Sciences was credited with discoverin­g the raptor’s bones. It said the dinosaur was also one of the last to roam the Earth before extinction.

The apex- predator was believed to be a 5- ton giant and the largest megaraptor, preying off smaller dinosaurs with its two sharp, curved claws and 40- centimeter talons.

Its scientific name, Maip macrothora­x, was given by Argentine paleontolo­gist Aranciaga Rolando. “Maip” comes from an “evil” mythologic­al character of Patagonia’s indigenous Aonikenk people that was associated with “the shadow of the death” who “kills with cold wind” in the Andes mountains.

The second part of the name, macrothora­x, derives from the expanse of the raptor’s chest cavity, which is about 4 feet wide.

“This animal is very large in size, and we were able to recover a lot of remains,” Rolando told Reuters on Wednesday.

Megaraptor­s had an agile skeleton, a long neck and an elongated skull with more than 60 small teeth.

The creature lived on Earth toward the end of the Cretaceous period and wone of the last dinosaurs before extinction. The raptor was discovered in Estancia La Anita, which looked far different 70 million years ago.

“There were aquatic and terrestria­l snails, plants of very different affiliation, it was a forest, almost a jungle, with puddles, lakes, streams, and diverse creatures such as frogs, turtles, fish, small birds, and mammals,” the scientists said in a statement.

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